The Language of Islamic Extremism towards an Automated Identification of Beliefs, Motivations and Justifications

1088 Words3 Pages

This Critical review will discuss the article The Language of Islamic Extremism towards an Automated Identification of Beliefs, Motivations and Justifications. (2002) It will be argued that while the study exhibits depth of research, clearly defined corpus techniques and a nuanced area of discussion, the aims of the paper are not explicitly defined and the acknowledged limitations of the study leave the conclusions relatively underwhelming.
Prentice, Rayson and Taylor (2012: 259-260) aim to indicate how and why corpus linguistics techniques can be utilised, in order to discover the ideologies expressed by Islamic extremists through various collected material. As a hypothesis however this is rather inexplicit, as no suggestion is given to what the linguists expect to discover, and the description of the ‘techniques’ is quite vague. This is in contrast to Alharbi (2012: 109) who declares clearly what terms will be traced, in what context and through what techniques. This study represents a shift to a distinct area of research, as the vast majority of corpus studies have focused not on the language of Islamic extremists, but on the rhetoric used to represent Muslims. Baker et al. (2013) examines uses of the word Muslim in the British Media; Salama (2011) explores how Wahhabi Islam and Saudi Islam are represented in the United States; Alharbi (2012) studies the Australian media and how Islam, Arab and Muslim are reflected; and Martin and Phelan (2002) compares the immediate representations of Islam following 9/11 on US Television and online. While not only proving useful in providing unique data, Prentice et al. (2012) have uncovered a new area of study and prompt further corpus linguistic research.
One way in which this article e...

... middle of paper ...

...e Messageboard Discourses. Prometheus: Critical Studies in Innovation 20 (3) p263-269
Prentice, S. Rayson, P. & Taylor, P. (2012) The Language of Islamic Extremism Towards an Automated Identification of Beliefs, Motivations and Justifications. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, 17 (2) p259-286.
Richardson, J.E. (2004) (Mis)representing Islam: The Racisim and Rhetoric of British Broadsheet Newspapers, Philadelphia, John Benjamins
Salama, A.H.Y. (2011) Ideological Collocation and the Recontextualization of Wahhabi-Saudi Islam post 9/11: A Synergy of Corpus Linguistics and Critical Discourse Analysis, Discourse & Society, 22 (3) p315-342
Schieffelin, B.B. Kathryn, A. & Kroskvity, P.V. (1998) Language Ideologies: Practice and Theory, North Carolina, Oxford University Press USA.
Sinclair, J. (1991) Corpus Concordance Collocation, Oxford, Oxford University Press

Open Document